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Authors Guild Biography

My Screenplay ROLLOUT! named as SemiFinalist in Park City contest

December 30, 2023

December 30 2023

Fierce Backbone Theatre Co. presents a reading of Stephen Blackburn's A REVOLUTION OF WOMEN at the Pico Playhouse in Los Angeles. Featuring Jo Dellapina as Hester Vaughan; Caroline Westheimer as Susan B. Anthony; and Ann Ryerson as Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Teri Weiss read Stage Directions. Directed by Carol Becker.

October 2023

The Kansas City Pitch interviewed me in the summer and ran a nice article about the re-issue of Each One Teach One. Read it here: https://www.thepitchkc.com/memoir-each-one-teach-one-continues-where-a-1991-pitch-article-left-off/

 

May 2023

 

The big news is that on May 15th, Northwestern University Press re-issued Each One Teach One. Originally published only as a hardback, the new edition is paperback. My wife Consuelo wondered why the hardback and the paperback are the same price. The answer is that the $22.95 price tag in 1996 would today be roughly $44. I believe that NUP has republished the book because, sadly for the world, homelessness has seen a resurgence in the past couple of years and so Casanova's story is again very pertinent. 

 

https://nupress.northwestern.edu/9780810145054/each-one-teach-one/

 

 

May 2022

Ron Casanova, Kansas City, MO
© 1991 photographic creators
 

I subscribe to a website called Academia.edu, a social networking site for academics. I have posted a number of articles there, and was gratified to be informed recently that my book Each One Teach One—Up and Out of Poverty: Memoirs of a Street Activist, by Ron Casanova as-told-to Stephen Blackburn, was quoted in a couple of academic papers a few years ago.

 

The first is a dissertation in 2014 for Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York, "Will the Poor Be With You Always? Towards a Methodological Approach of Reading the Bible with the Poor," by the Reverend Elizabeth Armen Theoharis.

 

The quote on page 57 of her dissertation reads "Although a significant leader in the movement to end poverty and an organizer for over twenty years, Ron Casanova from Artists for a Better America in New York, New York, wrote in his book, Each One Teach One: Memoirs of a Street Activist, that we may not be able to end poverty."

 

The second citation is a dissertation at Syracuse University by Jessie Speer in 2018, titled "Losing home: Housing, displacement, and the American Dream." Speer quotes extensively from Each One Teach One, too many times to include here, but among the most notable quotes, on page 20, Speer writes 

 

"Ron Casanova, in his memoir, critiques the way in which middle-class people displaced by an earthquake in California were privileged above those displaced by poverty…The new influx of well-to-do homeless in California was being taken care of by relief funds and organizations, while the people who had been homeless all along were still being ignored. The middle-class homeless were getting the support that all the homeless should have been getting."

 

Pages 142-143: "Memoirs and oral histories of homelessness reveal that people without property have been resisting real-estate capital for decades. Ron Casanova was a homeless activist in New York City during the 1980s, and his work inspired a movement of squatters. In his memoir, he condemns gentrified neighborhoods as 'Trumped-up, yuppified' (1996, 208) and calls on squatters to defeat the process of gentrification by collectively taking over housing in the city. He writes: 

 

'Instead of being puppets of Donald Trump and the real estate tycoons, and the landlords, we would be our own landlords. … Every time the rich and powerful throw somebody out of a building and tear it down, the price of real estate goes up. To the tycoons and landlords, our success would mean there was property they couldn't charge outrageous prices for.'

 

Casanova argues that by reclaiming space, homeless squatters can combat processes of displacement and disrupt those who profit from the violence of property."

___________

 

2021
 
Good news about "Frederick Douglass--Unexpected"
 
 

Ben Guillory, Artistic Director of the Robey Theatre; Stephen Blackburn; and Julius Tennon just after the July 21, 2019 public reading of "Frederick Douglass--Unexpected."
 

 

Delayed due to JuVee Productions' wealth of projects, as well as the pandemic, "Frederick Douglass--Unexpected" yet lives. Ben, Julius and I had a Zoom meeting Wednesday afternoon, July 28th. Ben and Julius gave me revision notes. Targeting late 2022 for production. 

 

Meanwhile...

I have a production company interested in raising money for my script "ROLLOUT!"

 

February 2020

 

News from July of last year that I hope will be fresh news a year from now!

 

Back in July of 2019, I was blessed to have Viola Davis's husband Julius Tennon, do a rehearsed reading of my one-man play Frederick Douglass—Unexpected at he renowned Robey Theatre, directed by Robey Artistic Director Ben Guilory. We had about 50 people, most of them black, and the feedback after wards was good. Hoping that Julius's schedule running JuVee Productions allows him to do a full production in early 2021. 

Handball coach Tony Huante (r) with player Vince Muñoz (1992)

February 2020

 

Just completed a draft of Rollout!, the true story of handball coach TONY HUANTE, of Commerce, California. Trained in youth as a bullfighter in Juarez, Mexico, he quit the bullring to come to California, where he worked as a crane operator at Bethlehem Steel for 40 years. My script tells the story of how he came to start coaching at risk kids from East L.A. and Commerce in the grueling sport of handball, eventually coaching the national pro champ.

Tony Huante (l) and actor Richard Yniguez (2009)

February 2019
 
 

May decide to self-publish GRANT'S HORSES this year. Writing on BLOOD BROTHERS, the Civil War sequel to GH. Focusing now on my main character's sojourn to Bagdad, Mexico in 1861. The boomtown at the mouth of the Rio Grande became the main point of export for Confederate cotton once the U.S.A. blockaded Confederate ports.

 

Meanwhile, had the first 15 pages of my play A REVOLUTION OF WOMEN read at Fierce Backbone Theatre Company's Monday night workshop. The play concerns the campaign by Women's Rights pioneers Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony to secure the release of Hester Vaughan, an English immigrant convicted of murdering her newborn. 

 

Last but not least, March 28th will mark the one year anniversary of my blood marrow transplant.

February 2018


Have begun writing my Civil War novel, which somehow seems more pertinent now than several years ago when I conceived it. Working title is THE DAGUERREAN.

 

Am looking for an agent for my novel GRANT'S HORSES, which takes place in Corpus Christi, Texas 1845-46, right before the war with Mexico.

 

Meanwhile...Great news! My leukemia is in remission, meaning that we're moving ahead with the goal of me getting a marrow transplant, probably mid- to late March. The marrow transplant has to happen in order for me to completely wipe out the cancer. I'm continuing with chemotherapy (month number 6!). I feel fine and am doing great--in fact, am 7 pounds heavier than when I was diagnosed with AML. I've been eating well and hitting the elliptical almost daily.

 

Thank you to all my wonderful family, friends, friends of friends, and well-wishers for your support, encouragement and prayers. It all helps and your love is very humbling. Again, thank you.

2017

My lovely and talented wife Consuelo Flores scored another success with her play "The Legacy of the San Patricios," It was selected for the Frida Kahlo Theatre's 10-minute play festival and ran three weekends in January. Starring Crystal Flores and Nathan Clark, the story is loosely based on how Consuelo and I finally got together.

After the January 6, 2017 performance. Left to Right, front row: Rochelle Newman-Carrasco, Consuelo Flores, Crystal Flores, Deanna Gandy. Left to Right, back row: Paul Messinger, Stephen Blackburn, Carlos Carrasco, Nathan Clark

April-May 2016

We had good crowds at the Complex to see Smokey rock it in FREDERICK DOUGLASS—UNEXPECTED.

Douglass (G. Smokey Campbell) is fed up with recent civil rights setbacks.
G. Smokey Campbell as Frederick Douglass
FIERCE BACKBONE presents FREDERICK DOUGLASS—UNEXPECTED by Stephen Blackburn

A workshop production developed in the Fierce Backbone lab.

Directed by David Wendell Boykins Featuring: G.Smokey Campbell

Right before taking the stage to launch his 1884 farewell speaking tour, former slave and internationally renowned civil rights activist Frederick Douglass receives an unexpected letter from women's rights titan Elizabeth Cady Stanton, a former colleague with whom he had a very public and ugly break years earlier.

SHOWTIMES: Friday April 29 @ 8pm Saturday April 30 @ 8pm Sunday May 1 @ 3pm

THE THEATER: The Ruby at the Complex 6476 Santa Monica Blvd. Hollywood, CA 90038 Suggested Donation $15 Tickets available at brownpapertickets.com

ALLOW TIME TO FIND STREET PARKING IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD.

Produced by Consuelo Flores & Stephen Blackburn **This production is made possible in part by a grant from The Los Angeles County Arts Commission.** (Artwork by Armando Norte)

Star of BOULEVARD NIGHTS Richard Yniguez (l) with Coach Tony Huante at handball courts in Commerce, California (2009)

UPDATE: July 2015

Just a brief note for today. have been meeting when possible with the irascible and inimitable DANNY MORA, who's mentoring me on my screenplay ROLLOUT! It's inspired by the true story of Tony Huante, an amazing man who for 20 years coached kids from the barrios of East L.A. and City of Commerce, producing several pro national champs, but more importantly, keeping lots of kids out of gangs and in school. Hope to have a new draft of the feature script by September.

Danny's an amazing man himself, with a long career in the entertainment world as a nationally touring standup comedian who back in the day worked the same stage as the just-starting-out Jay Leno and Robin Williams; as a screenwriter (LAVERNE & SHIRLEY, among others); and as an actor (most recently seen in MCFARLAND, USA, opposite Kevin Costner). He coaches lots of actors as well, and counsels various other writers and artists, such as LA CUCARACHA creator Lalo Alcaraz.

More soon.

* * *

Meanwhile, I have been working hard on expanding the 20-minute Douglass piece to a full-length one-man play titled FREDERICK DOUGLASS—UNEXPECTED. We did a stage reading of the piece at the Flight Theatre in the Complex in Hollywood at the end of May to an invitation-only audience of industry people whose feedback we trust. Rif Hutton starring as Douglass, David Wendell Boykins directed, and Consuelo Flores (my wife) produced. That version ran 97 minutes. The current draft runs 85.

OLDER POSTS:

Here's just some of what packed-house audiences had to say about LINCOLN ADJACENT:
• "WOW! With a stellar cast, amazing writing, and smooth flow, Lincoln adjacent is a supreme pleasure to watch."
• "A riveting play with breathtaking performances ...A powerhouse of stunning writing by Roger Q. Mason and Stephen Blackburn."
• "Powerful and compelling interconnected stories with a stunning cast."
• "These are personal stories, heart-wrenching in their honesty and in the hands of such capable actors."
• "Thoughtful and insightful writing comes alive with a stellar compelling cast."
• "A terrific theatre outing."

Read more audience reviews at
https://www.hollywoodfringe.org/projects/1818?tab=reviews

LINCOLN ADJACENT won a Hollywood Fringe Festival ENCORE PRODUCERS AWARD and was extended for two performances in July. My 20-minute, one-man play about Frederick Douglass, was one of three short plays comprising LINCOLN ADJACENT, a production by Onion Creek at this year's Hollywood Fringe Festival. My wife Consuelo Flores co-produced with Roger Q. Mason, who authored the other two short plays.

Frederick Douglass escaped slavery, educated himself and became a riveting political agitator, one of the great men of the 19th century. An advisor and gadfly to Lincoln, Douglass’ manners and eruditeness helped convince Lincoln of the humanity of African Americans. Douglass prodded and convinced Lincoln to let black men fight in the Union Army to win on the field of battle freedom for all African Americans. Without the legions of black soldiers, the Union might very well have lost the war, or at least made peace with the Confederacy without ending slavery. Without Douglass, there probably wouldn’t be any movies about Lincoln. My contribution to LINCOLN ADJACENT takes place decades after Lincoln’s death, when Douglass in his twilight years remained a respected, yet still controversial figure, even among African Americans.

"A Grecian extravaganza... always engrossing and fun to watch" —Backstage Photo by Joel Daavid

Fierce Backbone Theatre Company produced THE ROCK OF ABANDON on a frayed shoestring at the 99-seat Lillian Theatre in October-November of 2012.

The production looked great, with well-paced direction by Tiger Reel, strong acting by the enthusiastic and diverse cast, and we garnered great reviews.

"Riveting" —Stagehappenings.com Photo by Joel Daavid






























When blacklisted dramatist Euripides (Jim Hanna) turns sleuth in order to avenge the murder of a courtesan who jilted him years ago, his investigation unmasks blackmail and treason, putting him on a collision course with the powers-that-be, including the charismatic, rapist general Alkibiades, who has beguiled Athens into launching an unnecessary war.

Photo by Joel Daavid















"This masterpiece delivers twists and turns worthy of Hitchcock himself." —Examiner.com

Assemblyman Kritias (Gary Rubenstein), General Lamakos (Jeffrey Wylie), Ambassador Lycos (Drew McAuliffe), and General Alkibiades (Todd Babcock, back right) toast preemptive war in THE ROCK OF ABANDON, inspired by historical events. Written by Stephen Blackburn, directed by Tiger Reel.

Photo by Joel Daavid

Costume ladies of the gods Antoinette Muto (l) and Kim Little (r). They created for us the wonderful period costumes. Their company, Muto-Little, based in Larchmont near Paramount Studios, has built the costumes for scores of movies, tv shows and Disneyland shows, and for stars including Michael Jackson, Beyonce, Rhianna, and more recently, for the Billboard Awards, Bruno Mars and Justin Bieber. Thanks Antoinette and Kim!

I'm now seeking another production, with a budget that will support the large cast and epic nature of the story.


An eloquent voice for Americans too often ignored or scapegoated. —Booklist Buy from Northwestern University Press













Biography


Born in Little Rock, Arkansas, Stephen Blackburn grew up in Corpus Christi, Texas. He graduated as a Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Texas at Austin, earning his MA in Radio-TV-Film. He was an endowed James Michener Fellow in screenwriting and fiction 1995-1997, earning an MFA — yet again from the University of Texas.

From interviews and collaboration with noted national homeless organizer and activist, the late Ron Casanova, Blackburn wrote Each One Teach One: Up and Out of Poverty — Memoirs of a Street Activist (Curbstone Press, 1996), which Kirkus Reviews lauded as “A valuable firsthand account of a street survivor’s harrowing experiences.” The book is now available through Northwestern University Press.

On January 15, 2002, Blackburn was the featured author of PEN International's winter lecture series in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. He read from his book The Extinction of Rhinos in Mexico: 9 Tales of Life and Death (Xlibris, 2001).

In October and November of 2012, Fierce Backbone Theatre Company in Hollywood produced his play THE ROCK OF ABANDON, a noir murder mystery featuring the notorious playwright Euripides as the detective.

Blackburn lives in Los Angeles with his wife Consuelo Flores, who has an MFA in Creative Nonfiction from Antioch University.